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True_Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-12-03 10:02 PM
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The 'OK' [but fictional] Economy
The 'OK' Economy
by Jim Puplava


Profits are rising, stocks are up and the economy is improving. For the first time in a long time, the experts seem to have gotten their forecasts right this year. The economy and market seem to be doing just what the experts have predicted. Call it luck or call it smarts, the stock market is up after three years of producing negative returns. Investors are hoping to recoup heavy losses of the last three years with expectations that the glory days of stock investing are back. Experts are guardedly optimistic and expect further market gains for the remainder of the year. Last week's cover story in Barron’s, ”The Wall Street Forecast: Measured Rally” calls for stock market gains between 5-10% by the end of the year. The consensus of opinion seems to believe that the S&P 500 will hit 1,100 to 1,150 in the next six months. Experts advise over weighting portfolios towards stocks.

The reason for this optimism is historically low interest rates, tax cuts, firming business sentiment and improving economic numbers. In the latest survey of Wall Street pros, very few bears walk the Street. There may be a few closet bears, but if they exist, they are keeping remarkably quiet about their views. One of the few bears out there is Merrill’s Richard Bernstein. Bernstein believes that reported earnings aren’t what they are cracked up to be, a view that this author shares and will illustrate in just a few moments.

"No Problem" Market Priced for Perfection

Currently the bulls are firmly in charge of the markets and John Q. has been drawn back into stocks. Public sentiment at all levels is decidedly bullish. It doesn’t matter what negative events transpire as the market just seems to shrug them off. Interest rates rise sharply—no problem. Violence in the Middle East and in Iraq—no problem. Aggressive earnings forecast and the return of shady to corporate accounting—no problem. The continuing saga of financial scandals is completely ignored as if they don’t exist. Not a week goes by without another scandal surfacing. This is a no problem stock market priced for perfection. On the surface it all looks perfect. In my view it is the set up for The Perfect Financial Storm. I believe—both fundamentally and technically—that the markets are being set up for distribution.

more...
http://www.financialsense.com/stormwatch/update.htm
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Sick of Bullshit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-12-03 10:11 PM
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1. There's no way I'm putting any money into this market
Fool me once, shame on...
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Porcupine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-12-03 10:55 PM
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2. We are living in a Potemkin economy.....
money is printed and handed out to homeowners in the form of refinanced mortgages and inflated real estate. Meanwhile the taxpaying working populace is going on the soup lines.

Energy shortages are about to cripple what economy we havve left and our government is obsessed with unwinnible dreams of empire. A great future for my kids all in all.
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Code_Name_D Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-13-03 01:56 AM
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3. A clear macro cycle, Rise and crash, rise, and crash.
Okay, is it just me, or are we seeing a pattern here.

In the roaring twenties, thanks in part to the industrial revolution, the average person sank money into the booming stock market. Stocks rose without end, forming a giant bubble economy. This resulted in an unprecedented investing fever, further inflating the economy, making the stock market into a means unto itself. When the stock market became the end, the infrastructure that supported it was cannibalized to further feed the stock market. And John Q public did the same, following the example. They mortgage their homes, took out loans, all to sink more money in the stock market.

And then the party came to an end. But contrary to myth, the end did not come with the stock market crash. The Markets were having problems long before then, and the technicals foretold of weakness before that. The crash was only the point of epiphany for the general public that the market was based on a giant bubble, which had already collapsed at that point.

A decade passed, and the economy continued to languish in ruins. Simply re-investing in the market failed to stimulate any thing. It wasn't until the new deal, that began to shift the "investments" from "re-marketization" into public works and infrastructure, rebuilding the consumer base, literally from scratch.

Also contrary to myth, the war did not rebuild the economy. Wars in fact consume economies, not build them. Many a mighty nation, including Rome herself, were victorious in many champagnes, only to collapse because of this stress.

We now know it was the post war programs, and the many veterans benefits that continued the economic reconstruction started by the new deal. Solders returning home were given student loans, not only educating them for the future, but also softening the blow to unemployment. Cheap home loans meant returning soldiers could afford to buy homes for new families, creating demand for homes, and creating jobs. The baby boom created additional demand. But also high paying jobs aloud one bred winner to support a full family, and feed this new demand with sufficient consumer buying power.

It reached its peed in the McKarshty area, where conservatives took on "the communists" and set to work undoing the New Deal. One by one, the safe grads build into the economy, banking, and in business were removed. But ironically, Regonomics failed to see the boom Republicans foresaw. Perhaps because the Republicans insisted on raiding the treasury at every opportunity. The money needed for marketization was hard to come buy when the government T-bill kept soaking up all the capital.

When Clinton came and balanced the budget, without restoring the checks of the new deal, this was the act of freeing the same genie that was imprisoned by the new deal. The markets exploded, resulting in what was dubbed the "wealth effect," bringing us full circle. All though the law no longer allowed people to take out loans to invest in the markets. They found other was around this. Credit cards, and sicuritization.

Then the bubbles started to collapse. First it was the Dot.com, then world com, Enron, communications, the IT industries. The economic policy became a giant bubble shell game. Keep moving the eggs into the ballooning basket, and away from the disintegrating basket. Not to mention any other number of clandestine operations to manipulate the market. The infamous plunge protection team. But this is nothing that a good war can't fix right?

But the nature of the true economic problems has yet to sink into the general public. Many still believe that the market works like clock work. That it will continue to rise "on average" (something my dad said to justify his recent losses). But just like before, infrastructure is being cannibalized to be thrown into the markets. Whole industries are moved over seas, and the economy begins to bleed to death as consumer buying power rapidly erodes.

All though more knowable economic voices do not seem to think so. The tea leaves as I read them clearly have another massive market crash on the horizon. As economic reality drags the market down, market manipulation continues to drive it up.

Spending on the war in Afghanistan and Iraq are no different from other wars, representing fiscal black holes into which capital is poured into, never to be seen again, yet still providing that "one time" bump to economic numbers and profit margents to certain companies. But only so long as there is a war to spend on. So the quagmire that is Iraq, to the tune of 86 billion, seems to do quite nicely in this area. There is also the massive tax cuts, also pouring more money into the markets as the wealthy look for new places to park their fortunes. But how long can these upward forces on the market be maintained? A few months? A year? It's like a poorly built dam. As the water collects on the far side, the towns folk scramble to bring up trees to reinforce the dam. Eventually however, they run out of trees, while the water pressure continues to build.

Clearly, we have a little further to go before we can start talking about rebuilding the economy. If history repeats itself, than we still have one major market crash and about ten years of languishing economies to go. It may take this long for all the good little patriots out there to come to grips with the truth.

But that is too loops of the same cycle, with both lasting about 40 years. Will we see history repeat itself yet again in 2040? And then again in 2080? Their has been some argument over the over all weakness of capitalism in general, leading to some support to this. Or is it possible to brake the cycle, by embracing a truly enlightened economic thinking, one built on observed natural economics, and a careful set of checks and balances? But how can this exist at the same time as suply side "mythology" and an almost raciest attitude against "socialists" and taxation?
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